Hello, I've worked in an english camp last summer. The material that we used was basically games. It's as simple as that. Little games some anglophones parents play with their children do the work quite well. For young children it's really important to have a guide line. What I mean is that you need to have a story or a game that you can play and modify during the summer.
At my summer camp, we had a character that everyweek was in a different world and that the kids had to do some activities to help this character go through the worlds.
If you ever need any other help you can reply !
You can also contact the Camp Keno for information

Hi, I also worked in an English camp this past summer, so I might be able to give you some tips. I don’t know what age group you are going to be monitoring, but our kids were from 5 to 13 years old (not in one same group of course). We also taught English through games. Children like it when they don’t feel they are actually learning something, especially at summer camp. Each week we had content to cover, it was really the basics (numbers, colours etc.). So whatever the content, we just picked a game that we liked, and changed some rules to make it fit with the content.

I wonder whether creativity plays a big part. My experience is entirely with adults and I'm afraid a rigid framework wouldn't work with children. I don't consider myself as a creative person but nevertheless I would like to try next summer...

I wonder whether creativity plays a big part. My experience is entirely with adults and I'm afraid a rigid framework wouldn't work with children. I don't consider myself as a creative person but nevertheless I would like to try next summer...